This week’s fresh listings:
This page is to be updated every
Tuesday and will contain all the latest Coin,
Medal & Token listings for that particular week.
The more observant of you may have realised that I no
longer keep previous "Fresh Listings" coins on this page.
All for sale coins can be found via the category grid on the front
page. Most sold coins are now accessible via a new link on that same
category grid.
Additions to www.HistoryInCoins.com
for week commencing Tuesday 17th December 2024
WSC-9044:
John Baliol
Scottish Hammered Silver Long Cross & Stars Penny. Second coinage, smooth
surface issue, circa 1292-6. Berwick
mint. Obv: +IOhANNES DEI GRA, bust left. Rev: +REX SCOTORVM, long cross
with x4 mullets or stars of six points in angles. Spink 5071. John Baliol was “chosen” out of thirteen competitors for the
Scottish throne upon the death of Alexander III. The English king, Edward I, was the
arbitrator. John Baliol’s
four year reign ended in 1296 with his abdication when Berwick, Edinburgh, Perth,
Roxburgh and Stirling all fell to the English. Unlike the first issue John Baliol pennies, very few specimens of this coinage have
been found recently with metal detectors.
Both very rare and desirable in this grade. £595
Provenance:
ex Mike Vosper
WSC-9045:
1565 Mary and Henry
Darnley Scottish Hammered Silver Two Thirds Ryal. Fourth period, circulated at 20
shillings. Edinburgh mint. Obv: +MARIA & HENRIC DEI GRA R & R
SCOTORV and totally different to the 1565 first issue Ryal,
no images of either Mary or Henry. Spink 5426. Mary
became queen at only seven days old. She
married Lord Henry Darnley (second marriage) in 1565 - this coin very much from
that union period. Darnley was killed in
an explosion in 1567, thereby bringing this date run to an abrupt end. It is interesting to note that this reverse
die was struck 156- in order to insert the appropriate final digit as and
when. Unusual to find this denomination
NOT counterstamped under Mary's son (Darnley was officially the father), the
future James VI of Scotland and James 1st of England. Scottish circulation was much more intense than
south of the border due to lack of sufficient coinage physically in
circulation, so that, coupled with the inadequate and shallow-sunk dies, led to
very, very few coins of this type or similar ending up in anywhere near VF
today. £1,365
WAu-9046:
1602 James VI Hammered Gold
Sword & Sceptre Piece of 120 Shillings.
Eighth gold coinage (1601-4), struck in 22ct gold whilst James was still
only James VI of Scotland. Edinburgh mint. Obv: +IACOBVS 6 D.G.R. SCOTORVM. Spink 5460. It is generally accepted that Scottish
coinage is much more attractive than its English counterpart, especially from
the James V until 1603 period when James ascended the English throne and, by
necessity, the two country's followed a more unified path in terms of coinage. This Sword & Sceptre piece is absolutely
no exception to that aesthetic appraisal.
As such, these coins often turn up impaired; being found mounted or
pierced in order to display on the body in the form of jewellery. Gold coins are also frequently found with
bite marks and creases, often straightened but always leaving a crease
mark. This coin is a superb example with
none of that, although it has been cleaned at some point in its 420 year
life. Scottish coins of quality are
increasing in value seemingly overnight; gold coinage much more so, which is
the main reason I can no longer offer Lay-Away on any gold coins. Here you have both an investment opportunity
together with a seriously attractive coin to potentially go into your
collection. £2,895
Extra information added to this listing:
WMH-9037: Edward V or Richard III
Hammered Silver Medieval Groat. Type
2a, reading EDWARD DI GRA REX ANGL Z FRANC.
London mint, initial mark Boar's Head 1
struck over Sun & Rose 1. Spink 2155. Obverse
dies in the name of Edward with an underlying Sun & Rose 1 initial
mark. In 1483, on 12th February, the Cinquefoil
coinage of Edward IV's type XXI ended.
The new mint master, Bartholomew Reed, entered into an indenture with
the king and thus Sun & Rose 1 was introduced. Edward died on the 9th
April 1483
but Sun & Rose 1 continued through the very short reign of Edward V and
into the reign of Richard III. This
ended on 20th July when a new indenture was prepared by Robert Brackenbury to introduce the Boar's Head mark. The dies were prepared very soon after
Richard III ascended the throne on 26th June 1483.
Boar’s Head initial mark - the White Boar was the personal device or
badge of Richard III and dear to his heart.
Richard III was the last of the medieval monarchs, losing to Henry Tudor
on Bosworth
Field, or
as is now the current thinking, on a field a few short miles from that famous
location. The famous
"King in the Carpark."
Whist Richard was no saint (I think some poor decisions and a ruthless
streak that they all had at that time was about as bad as it got), he probably
wasn't a ‘child killer’, ‘murderer’, or ‘usurper’, at least no more than any
other medieval monarch. Don't believe
all that Shakespeare tells you!! So here
we have a coin struck from an obverse die that was very much part of the Holy
Grail of Edward V's coinage but modified by the addition of Richard III's beloved Boar’s Head initial mark, but crucially
leaving the old regnal name intact.
Coincraft place this coin under the Edward V category whilst Spink place
it under Richard III. Incidentally, as a
Richard III groat, it is the rarest type, other than the York example - the last one of those I
saw go through auction achieved £7,000 before
commission. An
extremely rare coin indeed. £3,875
Provenance:
ex Spink (August 2014 for £3,010) sold to...
ex Frank Limouze
collection (dispersed 2024)